Garry Klassen has skied at Snow Summit quite a bit since Big Bear was added to our Mammoth passes 3 years ago, but he lives ~45 minutes closer than I do. This was only the second time Liz and I have gone out there since 2015.
There was a modest 5 inches of snow at Christmas, but it's been mostly cold ever since, so there were rapid terrain expansions over the holidays with snowmaking from Big Bear Lake. Lower Log Chute at Snow Summit and Silver Mt. at Bear Mt. opened at Christmas. Summit's Wall opened Dec. 28, and Summit's chair 10 plus Bear's Geronimo opened Dec. 29. These later 3 sectors never opened during the dismal 2017-18 season.
New Year's Day was the coldest up there: high 27F, low 11F, so there rated to be a widespread dose of new snowmaking when we skied January 3. The schools are still out, so that was much in evidence. Garry drove us up there, arriving by 8:45AM. The upper lot at Summit is all paid on weekends/holidays, and I was happy to pay the $20 to avoid the tedious cattle car shuttle from the remote Brownie parking lot. In the old days the upper lot was free, but on a weekend/holiday you weren't getting into it unless you were there by 8:15AM. And of course back then I had to buy a day ticket while now it's on my season pass.
We started with 3 top to bottom runs on Miracle Mile, Summit Run and Westridge. Then we moved to Wall, Olympic and 4 runs on Chair 10. As I suspected, with the recent run of weather, the manmade groomed snow was about as close as it can get to the natural stuff. This was particularly noticeable on the usually slushy bottom of Westridge and the often hardpacked Olympic. The east side of Snow Summit (chairs 6, 7 and 10) had plenty of elbow room and no lines despite the holiday crowd. Liz on her way to Chair 10:
Note the manmade snow plastered on the tree near the bottom.
We had lunch at 11:30 at View Haus at the top of chair 1 and I was surprised that it did not get that busy by noon as I usually see on a weekend/holiday. We skied Wall, Timber Ridge and Off Chute before catching the 1:00PM shuttle bus to Bear Mt. We skied 12,000 vertical at Snow Summit with the longest lines at chairs 1 & 2 not exceeding 5 minutes.
There's no question it was busy as the shuttle bus passed by the Brownie and Moonridge parking lots and they were packed. The base of Bear Mt. was hopping, though our line to get up the Bear Express was barely 5 minutes. The wide and popular Park Run:
The old chair at right serves Outlaw, which is not open yet though it looked like some snow had been made over there.
We skied Showtime to Silver Mt. and skied both runs Exhibition and Ripcord there.
Bear's topography forces you to the base again to get to Geronimo. You must ride the Access Express, and that is where the holiday crowd was evident.
It's a high speed lift but serves easy terrain so it doesn't run that fast and can stop for loading/unloading mishaps. The line was 12 minutes.
1,100 vertical Geronimo had no line and I skied it 4x.
The lower pitch here sometimes has frozen granular but was all packed powder today.
The top at 8,805 feet is SoCal's highest lift served point. Garry remarked that's still 100 feet lower than Mammoth's Main Lodge. Here's Garry and the view of San Gorgonio.
I noted that the top of San Gorgonio is 500 feet higher than the top of Mammoth. But you need to be a hardcore backcountry camper to ski it.
Weather warmed to a bit over 40F midday so flatter areas near the base softened some. But the sun is low angle and there are lots of trees for shade, so the snow should hold up for a while. There may be ~6 inches or so of natural snow this weekend.
I skied 8,100 vertical at Bear Mt. before we caught the 3:15PM shuttle back to Snow Summit and got on the road by 3:45. We had a about 20 minute slowdown getting past Snow Valley but still got back to Garry's in Alta Loma by 5:20PM. If we had left any later we would have needed to take the 25 mile longer back route through Redlands to avoid the frontside traffic.
There was a modest 5 inches of snow at Christmas, but it's been mostly cold ever since, so there were rapid terrain expansions over the holidays with snowmaking from Big Bear Lake. Lower Log Chute at Snow Summit and Silver Mt. at Bear Mt. opened at Christmas. Summit's Wall opened Dec. 28, and Summit's chair 10 plus Bear's Geronimo opened Dec. 29. These later 3 sectors never opened during the dismal 2017-18 season.
New Year's Day was the coldest up there: high 27F, low 11F, so there rated to be a widespread dose of new snowmaking when we skied January 3. The schools are still out, so that was much in evidence. Garry drove us up there, arriving by 8:45AM. The upper lot at Summit is all paid on weekends/holidays, and I was happy to pay the $20 to avoid the tedious cattle car shuttle from the remote Brownie parking lot. In the old days the upper lot was free, but on a weekend/holiday you weren't getting into it unless you were there by 8:15AM. And of course back then I had to buy a day ticket while now it's on my season pass.
We started with 3 top to bottom runs on Miracle Mile, Summit Run and Westridge. Then we moved to Wall, Olympic and 4 runs on Chair 10. As I suspected, with the recent run of weather, the manmade groomed snow was about as close as it can get to the natural stuff. This was particularly noticeable on the usually slushy bottom of Westridge and the often hardpacked Olympic. The east side of Snow Summit (chairs 6, 7 and 10) had plenty of elbow room and no lines despite the holiday crowd. Liz on her way to Chair 10:
Note the manmade snow plastered on the tree near the bottom.
We had lunch at 11:30 at View Haus at the top of chair 1 and I was surprised that it did not get that busy by noon as I usually see on a weekend/holiday. We skied Wall, Timber Ridge and Off Chute before catching the 1:00PM shuttle bus to Bear Mt. We skied 12,000 vertical at Snow Summit with the longest lines at chairs 1 & 2 not exceeding 5 minutes.
There's no question it was busy as the shuttle bus passed by the Brownie and Moonridge parking lots and they were packed. The base of Bear Mt. was hopping, though our line to get up the Bear Express was barely 5 minutes. The wide and popular Park Run:
The old chair at right serves Outlaw, which is not open yet though it looked like some snow had been made over there.
We skied Showtime to Silver Mt. and skied both runs Exhibition and Ripcord there.
Bear's topography forces you to the base again to get to Geronimo. You must ride the Access Express, and that is where the holiday crowd was evident.
It's a high speed lift but serves easy terrain so it doesn't run that fast and can stop for loading/unloading mishaps. The line was 12 minutes.
1,100 vertical Geronimo had no line and I skied it 4x.
The lower pitch here sometimes has frozen granular but was all packed powder today.
The top at 8,805 feet is SoCal's highest lift served point. Garry remarked that's still 100 feet lower than Mammoth's Main Lodge. Here's Garry and the view of San Gorgonio.
I noted that the top of San Gorgonio is 500 feet higher than the top of Mammoth. But you need to be a hardcore backcountry camper to ski it.
Weather warmed to a bit over 40F midday so flatter areas near the base softened some. But the sun is low angle and there are lots of trees for shade, so the snow should hold up for a while. There may be ~6 inches or so of natural snow this weekend.
I skied 8,100 vertical at Bear Mt. before we caught the 3:15PM shuttle back to Snow Summit and got on the road by 3:45. We had a about 20 minute slowdown getting past Snow Valley but still got back to Garry's in Alta Loma by 5:20PM. If we had left any later we would have needed to take the 25 mile longer back route through Redlands to avoid the frontside traffic.